• Montenegro, C. (ECE) – Control of Uncertain Hybrid Systems

    Machine learning endows autonomous systems to uncover underlying structures and physical laws from measured data and to leverage these models for prediction and decision-making. As the costs of data acquisition, processing, and storage decline—and sensors become increasingly widespread alongside ever-improving algorithms—artificial intelligence has attracted significant attention in research and industry. Machine-learning methods are particularly attractive […]

  • August Slugs & Steins with Professor Nancy N. Chen

    Breathing in the Anthropocene: Reflections on Breath, Air, and Vitality This presentation examines breathing in the present moment when humans vastly transform Earth ecosystems that impact health and well-being. Atmospheric transformations via worsened air highlight connections of breath with health. How might breath be shaped by cultural and individual experiences? Ethnographic research at the intersections […]

  • Ghosh, S. (CMPM) – Scientific Sensemaking with Spatial Data in Collaborative Virtual Reality

    Collaborative virtual reality environments have the potential to greatly impact scientific progress, especially those relating to existential human problems. Within these virtual environments, scientists could view and interact with spatial data in applications as part of their sensemaking process, however, there are design challenges and barriers to development. This advancement document presents research questions related […]

  • Mawhorter, R. (CSE) – Certified Synthesis for Interactive Media: High Assurance Metroidvania Generation

    Engineering 2 Engineering 2 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA

    Program verification has been applied in many contexts (including videogames), but the scale and complexity of the examples that have been analyzed fall short of the ability to analyze many existing games without massive computational costs. My research focuses on automatic analysis and design of one particular game: Super Metroid, with the goal of creating […]

  • What the Mouth Remembers: Lost Recipe, Found Words

    Eloise Pickard Smith Gallery 11 Cowell Service Rd, Santa Cruz, CA

    What the Mouth Remembers is a research-creation project that explores how spoken language, especially when fragmented, mistranslated, and passed down across migration, family histories, and colonial ruptures, becomes a site of embodied memory, survival, and imaginative reconstruction. At the heart of the project is the Jeju language, not as a fixed object of preservation but […]

    free and open to the general public
  • BME Special Seminar: La protein and the RNA Polymerase III transcriptome

    Presenter: Richard J Maraia, MD, Senior Investigator and Head of the Section on Molecular and Cell Biology in the Intramural Research Program, NICHD Description: The La protein is a eukaryote-ubiquitous RNA-binding protein that (in the organisms examined) stabilizes newly synthesized RNA polymerase (Pol) III transcripts by transiently protecting their 3’-ends prior to maturation as abundant […]

  • Effective Multigenerational Communication

    Silicon Valley Campus 3175 Bowers Avenue, Santa Clara, CA, United States

    Join the Silicon Valley NHRA and learning partner Steps for an interactive session using drama-based learning to improve communication across generations in the workplace. Through scenario-based activities, you'll explore real-world challenges and uncover how different generations approach work, communication, and leadership. Learn how this approach supports HR and talent strategies by equipping teams with the […]

    $2 – $6
  • Interested in a paralegal career?

    You are invited to join a free, online informational session to learn more about the Center for Legal Studies Paralegal Certificate Course©, a professional education program taught through the UCSC […]

    Free
  • Lunch & Learn: Onboarding Graduate Students for Research

    Join colleagues from the Office of Research Compliance Administration and Baskin Engineering on August 13, 12-1 p.m., for a practical overview of onboarding graduate students in their role as researchers. […]

  • Return to the Redwoods

    Porter College D-Building, Santa Cruz, CA

    Return to the Redwoods is your chance to reconnect with friends, family, and fellow alumni while exploring the beauty of campus. Enjoy a variety of activities for all ages, including […]

  • AI Workshop: Spiking Neural Networks

    Silicon Valley Campus 3175 Bowers Avenue, Santa Clara, CA, United States

    Welcome to our immersive AI technology workshop series. During these sessions you will be introduced to new and established AI tools that will help you create and manipulate content in […]

    $95.00
  • Model Context Protocol: Why It Matters

    The Impact of Model Context Protocol Join us for an engaging exploration of the Model Context Protocol—a groundbreaking framework designed to improve communication and context-sharing across AI agents. As AI […]

    Free
  • Osorio, S. (AM) – Image-Based Wound Infection Classification

    Engineering 2 Engineering 2 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA

    This thesis investigates the use of deep learning for classifying wound infections from photographic images, using colony-forming unit (CFU) counts as a quantitative labeling standard. Leveraging the visual information in […]

  • Programming with Rust

    Join us in learning more about Rust, one of the fastest-growing programming languages, which continues to be ranked the most-loved language by its users. Its user base, aka “Rustaceans,” has tripled in just two years as more and more software products are being developed in Rust. In this fast-paced virtual overview with Danesh Forouhari, we’ll […]

    free
  • Moreland, Z. (AM) – Transcriptomic and Computational Analysis of Burn and Excisional Wound Healing

    Jack Baskin Engineering Baskin Engineering 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA

    Accurate assessment of wound healing progress is critical for optimizing patient care and preventing complications, yet clinicians currently lack precise tools to determine where a wound stands in the healing timeline. Wound healing progresses through overlapping stages of inflammation, proliferation, and maturation, each marked by characteristic shifts in gene expression that are difficult to interpret […]

  • Swaby, A. (ECE) – Improving X-ray Medical Imaging using Amorphous Selenium as a Photoconductive Layer

    Engineering 2 Engineering 2 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA

    The presence of coronary artery calcification is a strong predictor for future cardiovascular events where cardiac risk categories are quantified depending on calcification size. Dual-energy chest X-rays provide high contrast visualization to improve opportunistic screening for quantifying coronary artery calcifications, determining bone mineral density (i.e., osteoporosis) and characterizing lung lesions. As a dual-energy imaging modality, […]

  • Bhatia, N. (CSE) – Building Adaptive Intelligence into Wireless Sensing

    WiFi-based indoor positioning is a widely researched area focused on determining the location of devices. Accurate indoor positioning has numerous applications, including asset tracking and indoor navigation. Despite advances, their adoption in practice remains limited due to several challenges such as environmental changes that cause signal fading, multipath effects, and interference, all of which reduce […]